LONDON.- Aaron Zulpo makes idealized landscapes that are started in plein air to capture the spirit and essence of the environment they depict and then finished in the calmer atmosphere of the studio where final details can be added. In his first solo show with
Taymour Grahne Projects, Zulpo focuses on capturing views of grandiose mountains and the diverse and exciting appearance of Joshua Trees, a type of yucca native to the Californian desert.
The artist refers to Joshua Trees as the stars of the relatively uniform desert of low-lying foliage. These trees dwarf all their neighbouring plants by growing as tall as forty feet and have an extremely animated appearance. Some are symmetrical with so many arms they could be mistaken as a common oak or maple tree from a distance. Others have one or two chaotically crooked arms jutting in opposite directions. The pointy leaves that cap off each limb personifies the yucca, and they seem to be waving. These extraordinary plants grow 2 to 3 inches a year, live roughly five hundred to a thousand years, and only grow in a high-elevation desert. This body of work features landscapes from Joshua Tree National Park and the local mountain of Palm Springs, San Jacinto Peak.
In addition to painting Joshua trees to capture their beauty and distinct presence in the desert, Zulpo conveys ecological concerns to bring the viewers attention to the issue of climate change and its impact on the ecosystem. These great characters of the desert are one of the species predicted to have their range largely reduced and shifted within the next few years due to wildfires, drought and human activities related to habitat loss. For Zulpo, painting the endangered tree is an attempt to memorialize its nobility and grandeur and keep it alive in our collective memory in case it does go extinct in the near future.
Aaron Zulpo (B. 1985, Illinois) is an artist living and working in Palm Springs, California. He received a BFA from Rhode Island School of Design and is a co-founder of the residency The Guild of Adventure Painters, a traveling residency that takes studio artists to picturesque locations to paint landscapes. Zulpo has had solo exhibitions at Visions West Contemporary (Denver, CO), 1969 Gallery (NYC) and in 2021 curated an Armory off-site project in conjunction with his residency, The Guild of Adventure Painters. Solo Exhibitions include Ski Vacation, Visions West Contemporary, Denver, Colorado (2019); UP and Up, 1969 Gallery, New York (2018); Tales of American Adventures, Visions West Contemporary, Denver, Colorado (2017). Notable group exhibitions include I love to paint, curated by Kim Dorland, Patel, Toronto, Canada (2019); Personal Spaces, Danese / Corey, New York (2019); Summer of Love, Freight + Volume, New York (2019). Aaron was a fellow at the Shandaken Paint School (2020). His work has been featured in publications such as White Hot Magazine and Hyperallergic.